Fujifabric

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Masahiko Shimura
)
Fujifabric
Origin
Capitol Music
Sony Music Associated Records (2010-present)
MembersSōichirō Yamauchi (vocals, guitar)
Daisuke Kanazawa (keyboards)
Shinichi Katō (bass)
Toshiki Hata (support drums)
Past membersMasahiko Shimura (vocals, guitar) (deceased)
Yūichi Katō (bass, 2000-2002)
Akira Hagiwara (guitar, 2000-2002)
Sachiko Tadokoro (keyboards, 2000-2002)
Takayuki Watanabe (drums, 2000-2004)
Fusafumi Adachi (drums, 2004-2006)
Websitehttp://www.fujifabric.com

Fujifabric (Japanese: フジファブリック, Hepburn: Fujifaburikku) is a Japanese rock band formed in 2000. While their music can be mostly categorized as alternative rock or power pop, their music usually consists of an eclectic mix of genres, including jazz, disco and progressive rock.

Name origin

Before the band made their formal debut they were originally known as Fuji Fabric (富士ファブリック, Fuji Faburikku), in homage to the textile company which former band drummer, Takayuki Watanabe's, father owned. Just before moving to Tokyo and reforming the band, the spelling was changed to Fujifabric (フジファブリック, Fujifaburikku).[1]

History

Formation and indie period (2000-2004)

Originally a

Fujiyoshida, Yamanashi natives began to take their musical interests more seriously and moved to Tokyo,[1]
and recruited Sachiko Tadokoro, Yūichi Katō and Akira Hagiwara for the band.

The first Fujifabric performance was in October 2001 at Club Eggsite (now known as

Major albums and hiatus (2004-2010)

The band soon caught the attention of several major

À la molto
.

Fujifabric released their first full (and

In 2005 the band released three more singles including the popular "

Ginga" and "Akaneiro no Yūhi", the latter which featured the song "Shinkirō" and was used as the ending theme in the film Scrap Heaven. In November 2005, Fujifabric released their second full album Fab Fox which went on to peak at No. 8 on the Oricon charts, selling 13,152 units in its first week.[4]

After a two-year hiatus, Fujifabric released the single "Aoi Tori", which peaked at No. 9 on the Oricon Chart and was the ending theme of the film Nightmare Detective. The band's subsequent single "Surfer King", featured Masahiko Kitahara, Nargo, and Gamo of Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra, and marked Fujifabric's first collaboration. The tracks were included on Fujifabric's third studio album, Teenager. The album came out on January 3, 2008, and peaked at No. 11.[5] Their second most recent single, entitled "Sugar!!" was used as the theme music for J-Sports' Nippon Professional Baseball broadcasts for the 2010 season.

On December 24, 2009, vocalist Masahiko Shimura died due to unknown causes. His final album as lead vocalist, titled Music, was released on July 28, 2010.

Memorial concert, label change, and new vocalist (2010-present)

Despite the death of their lead singer, the band continued with the remaining three members. In 2010, the band switched labels from EMI Music Japan to Sony Music Associated Records. The three remaining members performed a memorial concert in August 2010,

Puffy, Tamio Okuda, Polysics, and more. The DVD and Blu-ray from this concert was released on July 20, 2011. In August 2011, they announced that their sixth album, titled Star, would be released September 21 with lead guitarist Sōichirō Yamauchi as the new vocalist.[6]

The lead track from their twelfth single, "Tsuredure Monochrome / Ryūsenkei" (徒然モノクローム / 流線形, Tsuredure Monokurōmu / Ryūsenkei), released on May 15, 2012, was the opening song for the anime Tsuritama. The limited edition of this single includes a live DVD featuring the current lineup of Fujifabric performing tracks from Star.[7]

Their latest album, Voyager, was released on March 6, 2013. One of the singles promoting the album, "Small World", was used as the 4th opening to the anime Space Brothers.

In 2014 they released two songs that were featured in anime: "Life" for the second season of

Blue Spring Ride
.

Members

Current

Daisuke Kanazawa (金澤ダイスケ, Kanazawa Daisuke, born February 9, 1980 in Ibaraki, Japan) joined the band in January 2003, replacing the former keyboardist.

Shinichi Katō (加藤慎一, Katō Shinichi, born August 2, 1980 in Ishikawa, Japan) joined the band at the same time as Kanazawa, in January 2003. He is the bassist of the band.

Sōichirō Yamauchi (山内総一郎, Yamauchi Sōichirō, born October 25, 1981 in

lead guitarist
, and took over lead vocals following Shimura's death.

Former

Masahiko Shimura (志村正彦, Shimura Masahiko, born July 10, 1980 in

rhythm guitarist
of the group. He died on December 24, 2009, of an unknown ailment.

Fusafumi Adachi (足立房文, Adachi Fusafumi, born May 14, 1980 in

Ringo Shiina
's individual office kuronekodow before joining. He left the band on March 27, 2006, and is now front man for his band "Marvelous."

Support

Hiroshi Kido (城戸紘志, Kido Hiroshi, born July 27, 1981 in Kyoto, Japan) - drummer for Kenichi Asai's JUDE and unkie

Toshiki Hata (畑利樹, Hata Toshiki, born October 5, 1976 in Shimane, Japan) - drummer for Tokyo Jihen

Ryōta Sakakibara (榊原良太, Sakakibara Ryōta, born in Kyoto, Japan)

Discography

Studio albums

Mini albums

  • À la carte
    (2002)
  • À la mode
    (2003)
  • À la molto
    (2004)

Compilations

Singles

References

  1. ^ a b c d Smith, D. Keikaku: Fujifabric Archived 2011-07-17 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 24, 2007
  2. ^ ping OOPS! Music Community: フジファブリック Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 24, 2007.
  3. ^ オリコンアルバムチャートを読む (2004.11.22) Archived 2007-02-11 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 24, 2007.
  4. ^ a b "11/8付デイリーチャートチェック". Archived from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2007-08-24.
  5. ^ "Fujifabric - Release - ORICON STYLE Music". Archived from the original on December 9, 2007. Retrieved 2008-02-08.
  6. ^ "FujiFabric Announces New Album, STAR"".
  7. ^ 「徒然モノクローム/流線形」SPECIAL SITE Retrieved May 30, 2012.

External links